Tbe defendant comes into this court upon thirty-seven assignments of error. In bis very able printed argument, however, a very large proportion of these have received no notice or attention whatever, and we may presume, therefore, that they are waived, as we think they could be, without compromising the defendant’s rights.
Imitating the example set us by the learned counsel for the defense, we will consider the same points elaborated by them. The most important of these relate to the construction of the contract. We have already set forth the important covenants in this contract. The construction which the court below gave to its terms was substantially this, *511tbat if Shaw, after making bis first payment as stipulated, should effect a sale, and wish to convey a portion of land, that then, in such contingency, Brown was bound to convey the amount so sold, provided it did not exceed pro rata the sum paid; and if Brown failed, after notice and demand, to do so in a reasonable time, Shaw would be absolved from further performance of the contract on his part. On the other hand, if Shaw should promptly make the first payment, and should have no opportunity to sell, and did not sell any portion of the land before the last note fell due, and made default in making the last payment, then, time being the essence of the contract, he would forfeit the same, and forfeit the money which he had paid.
It is insisted that this construction of the contract is unsound, and does not reflect the true intent of the parties. We hold differently. In our judgment, it does give the true meaning and sense of the contract, and is in agreement with the natural import of the words employed, which, after all, is the safest criterion in arriving at the intention of the parties. By adopting this interpretation, greatef certainty is secured in the payment of the purchase-money at the time specified, by affording the purchaser increased facilities or means for raising the same, an object of as much importance to the vendor as to the vendee.
The interpretation contended for by the defense is variously stated in their instructions which the court refused, marked by Nos. 13 to 23, inclusive, and which, when divested of its multiform phraseology, means this: that the first payment, if made, was to be regarded in the light of a penalty or security to be held by the defendant for the more prompt payment of the last note, and in the event of a defalcation, to be forfeited; that the stipulation to convey to Shaw certain parcels of land which he might sell and wish to transfer by deed, has reference only to pro rata payments which he, Shaw, might make on the last note *512prior to its maturitj', and bas no application to the first note. This interpretation of the contract is presented argumentatively under various aspects and views, tbe logic of which, we are not able to accept.
If such was the intention of the parties they have been singularly unhappy in the use of language to express their meaning. See the case of McCraney, Exr., v. Griffin et al.
Again, much emphasis is laid upon the refusal of the court to give to the jury the fourteenth and sixteenth instructions asked by the defense.
The first of these is as follows: “That if the jury find from the evidence that the plaintiff was advised that the defendant could forfeit his tide to said land prior to the time specified in the bond, and that the plaintiff made the declaration to the defendants that he should not pay the said last note, and could not perform the said bond, on his part, with the understanding that said declarations would influence the action of the defendant, and induce him not to perfect the title to said lands in himself, and that the defendant did rely on such declaration, and by reason thereof did not perfect the title to said lands in himself, and be in readiness to convey said lands as provided in the bond, then the plaintiff cannot recover, on the ground that the defendant did not have the title to said lands named in said bond for the execution of said deed.”
We take it that the object of this instruction was to show to the jury that the defendant had a valid excuse for not possessing himself of the title to the lands in question, if the jury should find the existence of certain facts named therein, under the evidence.
The instruction overlooks the important fact that previous to all this the plaintiff had been absolved from performing any further his covenants in the bond, because the defendant, acting upon his own construction of the contract, had refused, on demand, to make to the plaintiff a deed to cér*513tain parcels of land, in proportion, to the amount already paid. The plaintiff, therefore, had a right to say, as he did say, a few days before the last payment fell due, that he did not expect to pay, and could not and would not pay the last note. For, up to this time, the plaintiff had made no default in the performance of his contract, but the defendant'had, and we do not know but what his failure in this respect was the cause of the plaintiff’s inability to pay the last note. We are certainly at fault in perceiving how the above instruction could, with any legal propriety, have been given to the jury.
The same objection lies against instruction number sixteen, with the additional objection that it is based upon a set of supposed facts, some of which are wholly unwarranted by the evidence in the case. We do not deem it important to incorporate it in this opinion, and point out, in detail, its faults as an instruction. The proposition of law which it contains may be true, yet, in the absence of testimony to sustain the special understanding or contract set up therein, by which a forfeiture of the contract was agreed upon, and the defendant released from all liability, by reason of his failure to deed, &c., it could not, as we have often held, be submitted to the jury.
There is only one other error which counsel in argument have particularly pressed upon our notice, and that relates to the introduction, at the trial, of some evidence offered by the plaintiff to establish, or as tending to establish, one of the issues on his side. He had, among other things, alleged in his petition, “that prior to the time fixed for the conveyance of said land by defendant to plaintiff, the defendant, by his own wrongful act, placed it out of his power to convey said land, or any part thereof, to plaintiff, according to his said bond.” This allegation was denied. The plaintiff offered a deed of conveyance from James Buel and wife to D. P. W. Day, purporting to be date’d *514and. acknowledged on tbe 1st day of April, 1857. This deed conveyed tbe southwest quarter of sec. 14, T. 78, R. 82. west, being one of tbe. tracts of land wbicb tbe defendant bad stipulated in bis bond to convey to plaintiff, on tbe 2d day of April, 1857; against tbe objection of tbe defendant, it was permitted by tbe court to -go to tbe jury as evidence. Its sufficiency to establish tbe allegation aforesaid without more, might well be insisted upon; its incompetency, as tending to maintain tbe plaintiff’s side of tbe issue, is not apparent to us. It is true, that it afterwards turned out in tbe evidence, that Buel and wife resided in tbe state of New York, that tbe deed was transmitted to Iowa with the name • of tbe grantee in blank, which was not filled up for some two or three weeks after tbe deed was sent to this state. This fact alone affords no sufficient reason why tbe deed should have been excluded, for we suppose that if tbe deed was in all. other respects honest and regular in its execution, tbe title under it would be deemed to have passed at its date.
One object in introducing this deed, we presume, was to show that tbe title of tbe land therein described was out of tbe defendant. If it tends to do this, although inconclusive, it is not, on that account, incompetent. Accompanied with other testimony, it might constitute an important link in tbe chain of evidence to establish that proposition.
Counsel, in argument, claim that the introduction of this deed must have had tbe effect to mislead tbe jury. Under tbe peculiar aspect of this case, we cannot comprehend bow this can be.
Tbe defendant, in bis special answer, and also in bis testimony, admits that be bad not tbe title to these lands at tbe time tbe plaintiff’s last note fell due, and excuses himself for not having obtained tbe title, upon tbe ground that plaintiff had failed to make bis payments according to tbe ' covenants in bis contract, claiming that be himself bad *515purchased the same lands on what were termed time bonds, in the manner that he had sold to the plaintiff, and that he did not perfect the title in himself, because the plaintiff had given him to understand that he should not make the last payment under his contract.
However valid this excuse might be, under some circumstances, it was inadmissible in this case, for the reason that he had released the plaintiff from making the last payment on said purchase, by failing to perform a precedent obligation, which was, to convey, on demand, before the last payment, certain parcels of land, in proportion to the amount already paid. And this really was the pivotal point in this case, and it was a matter of scarcely any moment whatever, whether said deed was admitted or excluded as evidence.
This comprehends, as we understand it, all the points made in argument of counsel, and as to the other matters and things set down as error, we are quite prepared to overrule each and all of them, and to affirm this case.
Affirmed.